From
Draft NOtices, January-March 2007

Muddled Thinking
About Conscription

—Rick Jahnkow

Ever since House Democrat Charles Rangel introduced his first
proposal to bring back the military draft in 2003, it’s
been amazing to see how much amnesia there is on the subject,
especially among some of those who consider themselves liberals
or “progressives.”

Supporters of Rangel’s bill (which includes a mandatory
civilian service option) make what seems on the surface to be
a compelling case. They say one reason our government is so willing
to launch aggressive military action is that the children of political
leaders and the wealthy elite do not face much risk from combat.
They point out that this is because the armed forces are maintained
by a system of recruitment that unfairly targets working-class
and middle-income people. They also argue that a stronger service
ethic is needed, along with more civilian options for performing
tasks that would benefit society. The points are valid, and so
it seems reasonable when some people conclude that a system of
conscription is needed to address such issues.

But the problem with this thinking is that it is far too simplistic
and only focuses on limited parts of the picture. It ignores important
historical facts and fails to consider an entirely different set
of social and political consequences that are inherent in any
system of involuntary service.

One of the forgotten historical facts is that whenever a draft
has been employed in the U.S. (which has been infrequently), it
has been used to make waging war possible, not as a device to
keep our government from entering a conflict. A good example is
our most recent experience with conscription during the Vietnam
War. The draft that was already in place as the war developed
made it easier for presidents Johnson and Nixon to merely open
the tap and pour out more bodies to fuel the conflict. As a result,
it lasted almost 10 years, took the lives of millions of people
and caused massive destruction in Southeast Asia. All of this
happened despite the strong anti-war and draft resistance movements
that spread across the country.

Draft supporters say that in the past, the rules of the Selective
Service System favored privileged youths and therefore didn’t
trigger the kind of opposition from the elite that would have
stopped the Vietnam War sooner. But there is no evidence that
drafting a few more affluent kids would have made a difference,
since initial support for the war was high and was driven by a
general Cold War fever that affected almost the entire population.

The claim that a draft could be made fairer today isn’t
realistic anyway. There will always have to be medical deferments,
which are easier to get when you have the money to pay for braces
or private medical exams and documentation that are the key to
getting disqualified at an Army induction physical. And those
with a better education — which is linked to one’s
socio-economic status — will have a distinct advantage when
it comes to successfully wading through the process to secure
conscientious objector status. I know how these factors work because
as a community college draft counselor during the Vietnam War,
I struggled to help low-income students whose limited resources
made it harder to gain recognition of legitimate claims for medical
deferments and conscientious objector status. It won’t be
any different under Rangel’s proposed draft. Furthermore,
affluent individuals who do wind up in the military would still
have the advantages of their education and political connections
to help avoid combat.

Whenever we go to war, whether our military is drafted or recruited,
socio-economic status is always a factor in determining who is
at greatest risk. And in a system with a civilian service component
like Rangel is proposing, advantages in education, personal wealth
and political influence will still be a factor in avoiding the
battlefield.

Another part of the picture ignored by supporters of Rangel’s
legislation — one that is especially ironic for those draft
advocates who say they are “peace activists” —
is the increased militarization that comes with conscription.
Because draftees are in the military for only two-year terms instead
of four or six, there is a much higher turnover of personnel,
and this means that a much larger portion of society is required
to go through military training. One of the main functions of
this training, especially at boot camp, is to strip the civilian
identity from every trainee, instill in him or her the values
of military culture, and perform the conditioning needed to produce
an obedient soldier who is acclimated to the use of violence.

What many people ignore is that there is no comparable effort
made to reverse this process when draftees leave the military.
So even though the conditioning doesn’t stick in everyone,
the net effect over time is to further militarize civilian society,
not civilianize the military (which some people have argued).
Indeed, this militarization function is one reason why conscription
has been so favored by authoritarian states. Examples include
Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan, Prussia, and dictators like Napoleon,
Stalin and Franco, just to name a few. In today’s context
of a U.S. government that wages preemptive war, threatens countries
that have done nothing to harm us, and assumes police powers that
the Constitution disallows, a system that would further militarize
the U.S. is the last thing that anyone should support.

Imagine, for a moment, what would have happened if conscription
had been in place at the time of 9/11. In that period of emotional
nationalism, Bush could have easily gotten away with boosting
draft calls and deploying a much larger force to the Middle East.
Following the neocon agenda for the region, then, we could have
already extended the fighting to Syria and Iran by now, and then
moved on to a confrontation with North Korea.

This leads me to point out a major contradiction in Rangel’s
rationale for a draft. He and others are arguing that it would
help slow down the rush to war (a claim unsupported by any historical
facts), while at the same time arguing that we need a draft because
our military is exhausted and more troops are required for the
mission they’ve been given. So which is it? Is a draft going
to help prevent or end a war, or help wage it? And if it’s
the latter, then isn’t opening up the tap for more troops
the last thing that war opponents should want to do? If we really
are against military aggression, isn’t it better that we
stick to demanding that the current mission be cancelled and,
simultaneously, do everything we can to cut off the flow of personnel
for war?

If you believe the other part of Rangel’s argument, he
essentially wants to force a change in foreign policy by holding
people’s children hostage — which includes the children
of people who have been struggling and sacrificing to end the
Iraq war. Isn’t hostage-taking something we generally condemn
in our society, and shouldn’t we have serious reservations
about supporting such a tactic?

The reality is that popular opposition to bringing back the draft
is still overwhelming, and legislators know that it would be political
suicide to attempt such a thing at the moment. So why go to the
trouble of rebutting pro-draft arguments from liberals or anyone
else? The answer is that such efforts to promote conscription
can, over time, accustom enough people to the idea of a draft
that at a point in the future, in the context of some national
emergency pretext, the politicians may then attempt what they
now are afraid to do.

People who are now advocating a draft need to be challenged to
look more carefully at the facts and consider the full, global
implications of what they are proposing. Otherwise, they may eventually
get what they are asking for, which would come back to haunt us
all.

This article is from Draft NOtices, the newsletter
of the Committee Opposed to Militarism and the Draft (http://www.comdsd.org)